Herb Ellis
Mitchell Herbert Ellis, known professionally as Herb Ellis, was an American jazz guitarist. During the 1950s, he was in a trio with pianist Oscar Peterson.
Biography
Born in Farmersville, Texas, and raised in the suburbs of Dallas, Ellis first heard the electric guitar performed by George Barnes on a radio program. This experience is said to have inspired him to take up the guitar. He became proficient on the instrument by the time he entered North Texas State University. Ellis majored in music, but because they did not yet have a guitar program at that time, he studied the string bass. Unfortunately, due to lack of funds, his college days were short-lived. In 1941, Ellis dropped out of college and toured for six months with a band from the University of Kansas.In 1943, he joined Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra and it was with Gray's band that he got his first recognition in the jazz magazines. After Gray's band, Ellis joined the Jimmy Dorsey band where he played some of his first recorded solos. Ellis remained with Dorsey through 1947, traveling and recording extensively, and playing in dance halls and movie palaces. Then came a turnabout that would change Ellis's career forever. As pianist Lou Carter told journalist Robert Dupuis in a 1996 interview, "The Dorsey band had a six-week hole in the schedule. The three of us had played together some with the big band. John Frigo, who had already left the band, knew the owner of the Peter Stuyvesant Hotel in Buffalo. We went in there and stayed six months. And that's how the group the Soft Winds were born". Together with Frigo and Lou Carter, Ellis wrote the classic jazz standard "Detour Ahead".
The Soft Winds group was fashioned after the Nat King Cole Trio. They stayed together until 1952. Ellis then joined the Oscar Peterson Trio in 1953, forming what Scott Yanow would later on refer to as "one of the most memorable of all the piano, guitar, and bass trios in jazz history".
Ellis became prominent after performing with the Oscar Peterson Trio from 1953 to 1958 along with pianist Peterson and bassist Ray Brown. He was a somewhat controversial member of the trio, because he was the only white person in the group in a time when racism was still very much widespread.In addition to their great live and recorded work as the Oscar Peterson Trio, this unit usually with the addition of a drummer, served as the virtual "house rhythm section" for Norman Granz's Verve Records, supporting the likes of tenormen Ben Webster and Stan Getz, as well as trumpeters Dizzy Gillespie, Roy Eldridge, and Sweets Edison and other jazz stalwarts. Ellis was part of the rhythm section but did not solo on every track. With drummer Buddy Rich, they were also the backing band for popular "comeback" albums by the duet of Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong.
The trio were one of the mainstays of Granz's Jazz at the Philharmonic concerts as they swept the jazz world, almost constantly touring the United States and Europe. Ellis left the Peterson Trio in November 1958, to be replaced not by a guitarist, but by drummer Ed Thigpen. The years of 1957 through 1960 found Ellis touring with Ella Fitzgerald.
The three provided a stirring rendition of "Tenderly" as a jazz improvisational backdrop to John Hubley's 1958 cartoon The Tender Game.
With fellow jazz guitarists Barney Kessel, Charlie Byrd and Tal Farlow, he created another ensemble, the Great Guitars.
Herb Ellis was also featured on an episode of Sanford and Son accompanying Fred Sanford's singing.
Ellis gave cartoonist and The Far Side creator Gary Larson guitar lessons in exchange for the cover illustration for the album Doggin' Around by Ellis and bassist Red Mitchell.
In 1994 he joined the Arkansas Jazz Hall of Fame. On November 15, 1997 he received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of North Texas College of Music.
Ellis died of Alzheimer's disease at his Los Angeles home on the morning of March 28, 2010, at the age of 88.
Discography
As leader
- Ellis in Wonderland
- Nothing but the Blues
- Herb Ellis Meets Jimmy Giuffre
- Softly...but with That Feeling
- Three Guitars in Bossa Nova Time
- Together! with Stuff Smith
- 4 to Go! with Andre Previn
- Guitar/Guitar with Charlie Byrd
- Man with the Guitar
- Herb Ellis and the All Stars
- Herb Ellis & Ray Brown's Soft Shoe
- Seven, Come Eleven with Joe Pass
- Jazz/Concord with Joe Pass
- Two for the Road with Joe Pass
- Rhythm Willie with Freddie Green
- In Session with Herb Ellis
- After You've Gone with Ray Brown, Harry "Sweets" Edison
- Great Guitars with Charlie Byrd, Barney Kessel
- A Pair to Draw To with Ross Tompkins
- Poor Butterfly with Barney Kessel
- Herb
- Great Guitars: Straight Tracks with Charlie Byrd, Barney Kessel
- Windflower with Remo Palmier
- Soft & Mellow
- Great Guitars at the Winery with Charlie Byrd, Barney Kessel
- At Montreux Summer 1979
- Interplay with Cal Collins Concord Jazz, 1981)
- Great Guitars at Charlie's Georgetown with Charlie Byrd, Barney Kessel
- Anniversary in Paris with Marc Hemmeler
- Doggin' Around with Red Mitchell
- Roll Call
- Texas Swings
- The Jazz Masters with Ray Brown, Serge Ermoll,
- The Return of the Great Guitars with Charlie Byrd, Mundell Lowe, Larry Coryell
- Down-Home
- Herb Ellis Meets T. C. Pfeiler
- Burnin'
- An Evening with Herb Ellis
- Blues Variations
- Conversations in Swing Guitar with Duke Robillard
- Great Guitars Live with Charlie Byrd, Barney Kessel
- More Conversations in Swing Guitar with Duke Robillard
- Trio
- Triple Treat
- Overseas Special
- Triple Treat II
- Triple Treat III
- Hello Herbie
- Jazz at the Philharmonic Blues in Chicago 1955
- The Legendary Oscar Peterson Trio Live at the Blue Note
- A Tribute to Oscar Peterson Live at The Town Hall
- Tenderly
- Vancouver 1958
As sideman
- Chicken Fat
- Benny Carter Plays Pretty
- New Jazz Sounds
- Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You
- Rockin' Chair
- Dale's Wail
- Little Jazz
- Soviet Jazz Themes
- I Love John Frigo...He Swings
- Stan Getz and the Oscar Peterson Trio
- Jazz Giants '58
- Diz and Getz
- For Musicians Only
- Alma-Ville
- It Was a Short Summer, Charlie Brown
- '
- '
- Coleman Hawkins and Confrères
- Lou Rawls Live!
- Swing's the Thing
- Bud Shank Plays Music from Today's Movies
- Magical Mystery
- Wind, Sky and Diamonds
- Oscar Peterson Plays Count Basie
- Oscar Peterson at the Stratford Shakespearean Festival
- The Oscar Peterson Trio with Sonny Stitt, Roy Eldridge and Jo Jones at Newport
- Oscar Peterson at the Concertgebouw
- On the Town with the Oscar Peterson Trio
- Hello Herbie
- Live at the Blue Note
- Only the Blues
- Soulville
- Pres and Sweets with Harry Edison
- Laughin' to Keep from Cryin'